11-letter words containing c, a, r, n
- free ascent — the upward traveling or path of a rocket carried by its own inertia after its engine has stopped operating.
- freelancers — Plural form of freelancer.
- freelancing — Present participle of freelance.
- french arch — an arch similar to a flat arch, but having voussoirs inclined to the same angle on each side of the center.
- french bean — British. the pod of a green bean or wax bean, eaten as a vegetable.
- french fact — (in Canada) the presence of French Canada as a distinct cultural force within the Confederation
- french flat — a flat that can be raised to or hung from the flies, and that contains practicable doors, windows, etc.
- french harp — harmonica (def 1).
- french loaf — baguette, long stick of bread
- french navy — a dark dull navy blue
- french seam — a seam in which the raw edges of the cloth are completely covered by sewing them together, first on the right side, then on the wrong.
- frenchwoman — a woman who is a native or inhabitant of the French nation.
- front crawl — a style of swimming in which the swimmer faces downwards and moves their arms alternately in strokes
- fructuation — the process of producing fruit
- fruit ranch — a farm where fruit is the main produce.
- fuck around — to have sexual intercourse with.
- functionary — a person who functions in a specified capacity, especially in government service; an official: civil servants, bureaucrats, and other functionaries.
- furnacelike — Resembling or characteristic of a furnace.
- furtherance — the act of furthering; promotion; advancement.
- gamechanger — A visionary, innovative person who changes the way people think of a situation.
- gantt chart — a chart depicting progress in relation to time of projects, tasks, schedules, etc.
- garbage can — a container, usually of metal or plastic, for the disposal of waste matter, especially kitchen refuse.
- garçonnière — a bachelor's apartment or quarters
- garden city — a city in SE Michigan, near Detroit.
- gas furnace — a furnace using gas as a fuel.
- gastromancy — a form of divination by interpreting words and sounds seeming to come from the stomach
- gastronomic — the art or science of good eating.
- generically — of, applicable to, or referring to all the members of a genus, class, group, or kind; general.
- genocidaire — a person who is guilty of genocide
- gerontocrat — A member of a gerontocracy; an aged leader, especially one clinging on to power or ruling only by virtue of age.
- glabrescent — becoming glabrous.
- glycerinate — to impregnate with glycerin.
- gnatcatcher — any tiny insect-eating, New World warbler of the genus Polioptila, having a long, mobile tail and a slender bill.
- gracileness — The state or quality of being gracile.
- grain coast — a historic region on the Gulf of Guinea, in W Africa, in present-day Liberia.
- grand canal — a canal in E China, extending S from Tientsin to Hangchow. 900 miles (1450 km) long.
- grand chain — a figure in formation dances, such as the lancers and Scottish reels, in which couples split up and move around in a circle in opposite directions, passing all other dancers until reaching their original partners
- grand duchy — a territory ruled by a grand duke or grand duchess.
- grand march — the opening ceremonies of a formal ball, in which guests promenade into or around the ballroom.
- grand-scale — of large proportion, extent, magnitude, etc.: grand-scale efforts; a grand-scale approach.
- grandnieces — Plural form of grandniece.
- granduncles — Plural form of granduncle.
- granolithic — (of concrete) containing fine granite chippings or crushed granite, used to render floors and surfaces.
- granulocyte — a circulating white blood cell having prominent granules in the cytoplasm and a nucleus of two or more lobes.
- graphicness — The quality of being graphic: grotesqueness or vividness.
- grass finch — any of several Australian weaverbirds, especially of the genus Poephila.
- great-niece — a daughter of one's nephew or niece; grandniece.
- great-uncle — a granduncle.
- greco-roman — of or having both Greek and Roman characteristics: the Greco-Roman influence.
- greenlandic — a dialect of Inuit, spoken in Greenland.